![]() ![]() It looks like Apple's newest 16-inch MacBook Pro is indeed significantly faster than its predecessor, as well as gaming laptops like Dell's Alienware x17 R1 and the Asus ROG Zephyrus M16 which pair Intel's 11th generation Tiger Lake CPUs with Nvidia RTX 3000 series laptop GPUs. Despite the fact that shipping dates for the new systems are slipping towards the second half of November, someone was able to get their hands on a 16-inch MacBook Pro with an M1 Max chipset (thanks, Tom's Hardware) and ran PugetBench for Premiere Pro 0.95.1 (which uses Premiere Pro version 15.4.1), giving us the first look at how Apple's new chipsets compare with x86 processors paired with discrete GPUs from AMD and Nvidia. Now that Apple has launched its much-awaited M1 Pro and M1 Max-based MacBook Pros, everyone is curious to see the company's performance claims put to the test. Premiere Pro, which was still in beta at the time, showed a performance improvement of 77 percent on average. To prove its point, the company even commissioned a study by Pfeiffer Consulting that looked at native Arm versions of Illustrator, InDesign, and Lightroom Classic. However, Apple's latest M1 Max chipset seems to be fast enough for both, owing to improvements in CPU, GPU, and media engine performance.īack in June, Adobe said its Creative Cloud suite of applications run more than 80 percent faster on Macs equipped with an M1 chipset when compared to equivalent systems with an Intel CPU. Why it matters: Adobe's Premiere Pro may not be the go-to software for most video editors on the Mac as it doesn't possess the level of optimization that Apple's own Final Cut Pro suite does.
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